Thank you, Mr. Chair.
As was stated, I'm the president of the Canadian Construction Association. We represent the non-residential construction sector in Canada. Essentially our members build everything except single-family dwellings.
You heard from our sister association, the Canadian Home Builders' Association, about two days ago. I'm tempted to just say “ditto” and leave, but I think I'm going to fill in the blanks and maybe provide some of the supporting information for some of the testimony you've heard.
Together with our friends in the residential sector, the construction industry in Canada employs over 1.3 million people. That is a record employment level for our industry. We've been sustaining record employment levels for some time now. Even when we lost workers during the recession, we made that up almost immediately, very shortly after the recession first hit.
We certainly appreciate the opportunity to be here. With this size of employment, you can well imagine that we are employers who are extremely interested in the subject matter before you.
I have three recommendations for the committee with respect to the specific subject matter you are looking at, but I'd like to set the table first, to give you a snapshot of where we are particularly in the non-residential sector of the construction industry.
We have a perfect storm happening. Canada's construction market, according to Oxford Economics, is now the fifth-largest construction market in the world. For a population the size of Canada's, that's saying something when you're up there with China, the United States, India, and Japan. It projects that over the next decade, Canada will remain in the fifth or sixth position. Russia may edge us out.
We're having unprecedented demand for our services, primarily from the resource sector and from large public infrastructure projects, especially in the transit area. Canada's public infrastructure is reaching that 45- to 55-year life and needs a massive overhaul and renewal. So we have that going on.
At the same time, we have an extremely aging demographic in our industry—and I did hear the previous witness—and we have excellent labour market intelligence, coming from a sector council that the industry established, which has all participants at the table, including labour and including owners who rely on our services.
They project demand for our industry out over an eight- to ten-year period. Then, as typical economists will do, they look at the supply side and say, “Where are we going to be with respect to our labour supply in terms of how many people are going through the apprenticeship system right now?”
The provincial governments are part of that exercise, providing excellent information on how many apprentices there are and what the labour supply looks like. That's being done by something called BuildForce Canada. I highly recommend that you visit their website. It tracks the supply and demand in the non-residential sector of the industry as well as in the residential sector.
What do they say? They say that by 2023 we will need to find 300,000 new workers just to replace those who are going to be retiring in the intervening years, and to keep pace with our rising demand. Often when people look at where your labour supply needs are and what you need in terms of your labour market, they forget to factor in projected demand.
With all due respect, most of the economic studies done with respect to labour supply are looking in the rear-view mirror and using old statistics. For an industry like ours, and the size of our industry, where a lot of our training in our specific trades takes four to five years, we can't be looking in the rear-view mirror. We have to be looking straight ahead and using a GPS system to tell us where we should be going. Labour market information, for us, is all about looking forward, not looking backward.
Where will these 300,000 workers come from? In fact, BuildForce Canada looks at how much of that can be dealt with and sourced in Canada. It finds that almost half will be sourced in Canada. There is, however, a shortfall of about 100,000 to 120,000, who, they say, are going to have to come from outside the construction industry or indeed outside Canada.
Now, I want to stop right there and say that the first preferred option of all of our employers is to hire Canadians and permanent residents. Absolutely that's what we want to do. That's our preferred option.
In fact if you look at our industry's usage of the temporary foreign worker program—and I'm using the 2012 stats, the most recent available—at the peak our industry was bringing in about 12,000 temporary foreign workers. That's less than 1% of the 1.3 million I just mentioned. Many of the reasons why we were bringing them in as temporary foreign workers were that for a long time the front door, permanent entry, was closed to us because of that silly 100-point system.
So the best way for us to get permanent workers was to bring them in on temporary visas, get their 12-month experience, have them go through a Canadian experience class, or indeed, through a provincial nominee program. We want permanent workers. We want workers for our future labour needs.
Interprovincial mobility is a huge area for us, and you know there isn't one solution for us in our labour market needs. Immigration's part of it, but it's only part of it. We realize for labour mobility we have to be better at getting the workers where the work is. That's the other perfect storm element we're facing.
Our projects are getting bigger just by the very nature of the types of projects. ReNew Canada publishes on an annual basis the top 100 public infrastructure projects in Canada. The latest report says of the top 100, 44 are individually valued at $1 billion or more.
Now I can remember 10 to 15 years ago, if you asked me how many billion-dollar projects there were in Canada, I could use one hand and not have to use all five digits. We are seeing that expanding. Natural Resources Canada has said there are some 600 large projects that are going to have to be done within the next decade worth over $650 billion.
Certainly our foreign competitors know how hot the Canadian market is. All the big European companies are here right now.
I better speed up. Otherwise I'll not get to my recommendations.
Our first recommendation is with respect to labour market information. Absolutely we need that, but we define labour market information as looking through the front window with a good GPS system, not looking in the rear-view mirror. We ask you to take a look at what BuildForce Canada is doing. It's an excellent approach that should be duplicated by other industries and other sectors.
Quite frankly, speaking for our industry, we like to do our own LMI because we trust it a heck of a lot more than something coming from government, with all due respect. The Job Bank does a great job of having a snapshot of where we are currently, but it's still not looking out, and we have to look out.
Secondly, and I think you have heard this from all witnesses, there has to be more employer engagement in determining where training dollars should be spent, particularly with LMDA funds. Why? Because employers are a major contributor. It comes from EI funds. Government's money? No. Employers and employees pay into the EI fund, and employers pay $1.40 for every dollar labour puts in, so let's stop this myth right now that business doesn't pay attention to training.
On a $1.95 billion expenditure just under LMDA alone, my calculations say $1.1 billion of that comes from employers in this country. So they should have a say, and we would argue that say should, again, be replicated at the provincial and regional level because there are unique differences in our country. Indeed, labour markets, as other witnesses have said, are different from one segment of the country to another. We need more employer engagement.
I'm not pointing a finger at governments and saying they failed to do that. To a great degree industry itself has failed to be at the table and be involved in that.
Our third recommendation is to avoid an “Ottawa knows best” approach to the development and management of these EI programs. The labour needs across the country are diverse. So from our perspective, leave the management of the programs with the provinces, but find a way to have true employer engagement in that model.
I think I'm going to stop there, Mr. Chair. I would like to entertain some questions about what you heard from the previous witness about whether or not there's a skills shortage in our industry. I can tell you there is and it is somewhat regional, but we have some big challenges ahead.